10 main pests affecting facilities management businesses

Facilities management businesses provide their clients with a wide range of commercial services, which include:

Keeping commercial buildings clean

Providing reception services

Providing catering arrangements

Providing stationery supplies

Providing pest control requirements

Maintaining building systems for heating, cooling and electrical maintenance

The challenge lies in being able to deliver such diverse services promptly, proficiently and at high standards.

Understandably, it is therefore not always possible to have expertise in all these services and this is when outsourcing to specialist providers can help facilities management businesses deliver client requirements — such as pest control — and uphold their own reputations.

Introducing the pests

To begin to understand what pest control involves, I would like to introduce the main characters — the pests!

Simply scroll down to learn more about which of these pesky creatures infest commercial premises and how to detect their presence.

Rats

The mere sight of a rat can cause alarm and for good reason too.

Salmonellosis, Weil’s disease, leptospirosis, rat bite fever and hantavirus are just some of the main rodent-borne diseases that can affect humans.

Rats can live on 15 to 30 grams of food and 15 to 60 ml of drink per day!

Droppings, footprints (where luminous gel has been laid down), holes in walls (that these gnaw through using their teeth) and scratching noises are some of the tell-tale signs of rats being amok in a building.

Mice

Though these creatures have weak eyesight, their senses of hearing, smell and touch are heightened.Mice are a common pest globally and these can exist incognito within buildings for quite some time before their presence is detected.

Like rats, mice tend to nibble about 0.15gm from multiple sources in a night.

The indicators for detecting the presence of mice are similar to rats, ie droppings, urine pillars, footprints, greasemarks, squeaking and scratching noises.

Birds

Pigeon faeces, feathers and nests are not only the tell-tale signs that indicate their presence, but can also carry microorganisms causing harmful diseases, such as: Birds can pose as a nuisance not only for littering the surrounding environs, ledges and rooftops of buildings with their disease-causing droppings, but also because of their tendency to roost and nest in alcoves and drains that can cause blockages.

Adult bed bugs are usually 4-5 millimetres long with oval or flat structures and reddish brown in colour. The nymphs are much smaller and lighter coloured.

In terms of potential health risks, bed bugs can bite their (human) hosts as they need the blood to complete their life cycle. Bed bug bites resemble insect bites.

Mosquitoes

Mosquitoes are known to be carriers of dangerous diseases — such as malaria, dengue, Chikungunya — and businesses in regions with high mosquito density need to therefore ensure that their working environments in commercial premises have the suitable protection in place to keep employees safe.

It can take a mere 6-10 days for mosquitoes eggs to develop into adults which can be found close to standing water where their larvae are likely to breed.

Fleas

Normally associated with domestic pets, fleas can infest properties as a result of there being other pests, such as rats, mice and birds, being present within the vicinity.

Fleas are about 2 millimetres long and reddish-brown in colour. Flea eggs, however, are difficult to spot, because these are tiny, about 0.5 millimetres long, oval in shape and white in colour. This makes it almost impossible to see them against rough surfaces and materials.

Flea bites may not be particularly painful but these can cause itchiness around the bite and may lead to allergic reactions, such as rashes and eczema. Fleas can carry diseases such as bubonic plague, murine typhus and tularemia.

Ants

Ants are more a nuisance than a hazard. If ants are sighted in commercial places that handle food, their business reputations could be questioned.

As ants are very small in size (ie between 1.5 – 6 millimetres long, depending on the species), their nests could easily be overlooked as spilt dirt or soil. Some ant types like to make their nests in quiet places, such as walls, where they are less likely to get noticed.

Ants thrive on food, food waste and water, so premises such as restaurants, pubs, cafes, canteens, hospitals, offices and warehouses need to be kept sanitised to the highest hygiene standards in order to prevent and control their presence.

Stored Product Insects (SPIs)

Beetles, weevils and moths are the main pest insects that can be found in stored food products.

Some mites infest and contaminate stored food products, such as cheese, flour, nuts, dried eggs, fruit, dried vegetable material and tobacco. Closely related to ticks, they are microscopic in size.

House Flies

For such reasons, house flies pose a health risk and a nuisance and could mean economic and reputational loss for businesses if good food hygiene is not practiced.House flies are attracted to sites that are contaminated with faeces and other filth, to feed on and breed. As a result, these pick up disease-causing organisms and can contaminate food sources that are left open.

Pest control solutions for facilities management businesses

As we glean from the above pest insights, if a pest infestation occurs in a commercial building, there are potential health risks to all those who work in it.

Having a long-term relationship with a commercial pest control supplier is beneficial because they can advise your facilities management business on suitable pest control actions (such as Rentokil’s Integrated Pest Management system) and preventative measures to have within commercial premises.

In this way, your facilities management business can stay assured that working environments remain pest-free. Always.

Sudakshina Bhattacharjee

Hello! I recently joined Rentokil Initial as a Digital Content Author, which basically involves writing about everything to do with pest control solutions for businesses and consumers. I am a qualified journalist working in the realm of digital content creation for the past 5 years. In my spare time, I'm an avid bookworm, movie buff and social media enthusiast!

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